British Shipbuilding and the State Since 1918: A Political Economy of Decline (Exeter Maritime Studies)

Description

Few industries attest to the decline of Britain's political and economic power as does the near disappearance of British shipbuilding. On the eve of the First World War, British shipbuilding produced more than the rest of the world put together. But by the 1980s, the industry which had dominated world markets and underpinned British maritime power accounted for less than one per cent of world output. Throughout this decline, a remarkable relationship developed between the shipbuilding industry and the Government as both sought to restore the fortunes and dominance of this once great enterprise. This book is the first to provide an analysis of twentieth-century shipbuilding at the national level. It is based on the full breadth of primary and secondary sources available, blending the records of central Government with those of the Shipbuilding Employers Federation and Shipbuilding Conference, as well as making use of a range of records from individual yards, technical societies and the trade press.

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About Author

Hugh Murphy is Senior Caird Research Fellow at the National Maritime Museum and a Researcher at the Centre for Business History in Scotland at the University of Glasgow. Lewis Johnman is Principal Lecturer in History at the University of Westminster and Secretary of the British Commission for Maritime History; his others books include The Suez Crisis (with Anthony Gorst)(Routledge, 1997) and Down the River: Voices from Clydeside Shipbuilding (Argyll, 2001).

Contents

List of Tables List of Plates Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Introduction 1. Sea Change: The Impact of the Great War and Boom to Bust in the 1920s 2. The Weight of History: The 1930s 3. The Challenge of War 4. The Missed Opportunity 5. Things Begin to Slide 6. Death by Inquiry: Geddes and Jockeying for Position 7. Things Fall Apart 8. Privatised Unto Death Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index